A retrospective exhibition of Finnish photographer
The exhibition unveils different stages of author’s creative career, from the 1960s to the present day. His early work consists of black-and-white portraits which show certain influence of August Sander, Irving Penn and Richard Avedon that Aalto himself described as his “heroes”. Along with portrait genre Jussi Aalto was also keen on documentary images that were aligned with traditional aesthetics of reportage photography.
Later Aalto took up colour photography and has created numerous portraits imbued with original specificity of Finnish culture. He captures very different individuals, from simple country boys and townspeople to important politicians, famous actors and musicians. In Jussi Aalto’s work an image of Finland arises from snapshots of his contemporaries’ lives. It is deepened with a series picturing sculptures that opens to viewers historical dimension of the country’s past.
“Now, when looking back at my photography career, which started about 1962 (I became professional photographer in 1965), I see quite a logical development. In 1964 I joined the Helsinki Camera Club (Kameraseura), which then was the most important institution in Finnish photography. It published Kameralehti, the biggest photography magazine in Finland, and many of the best professional photographers working in Helsinki were its members. When “official” art photography started in Finland at the end of the 1960s, half of the photographers who got scholarships and state prizes and had exhibitions, were HCC members. For a while (1969-1970) I was an assistant editor of the Kameralehti and was one of the four original photography teachers at the University of Industrial Arts, when it started in 1973. I was teaching mainly the history of photography and portrait photography. My first private exhibition (1973) was about snapshots, the next one (1977) about portraits, and these two braches were main subjects of my exhibitions till 1990s. In the 1970s I was working mainly for ladies magazines, but in the 1980s gradually turned to advertising photography. The 1990s depression had big impact on advertising, and my company went bankrupt in 1996. In 2002 I finally lost my studio. In spite of financial problems I held smaller exhibitions on various themes in the 1990s and in 2002 two big retrospective exhibitions. The first one covered my themes since the 1960s to the present day. The second one was dedicated to portrait photography. Some of these themes along with new material are presented at ROSPHOTO. In 1978 in Arles I participated in a Japanese photography workshop, where teachers were Shoji Ueda and Ikko Narahara. There I learned something about traditional Japanese concept of time and space, which fascinated me. I think it shows also in many of my photographs, but I’m not the right person to make such conclusions. On November 28, 2008 I joined the Blipfoto community and from that day I have taken and sent a photo to the site every day. These Blipfotos serve me as “finger rehearsals” to keep my sensitivity for more important projects. But it has also helped me to seek and find beauty in everyday objects. And in those blips there are many buds to new themes, which will eventually develop into more important projects”.
“Now, when looking back at my photography career, which started about 1962 (I became professional photographer in 1965), I see quite a logical development. In 1964 I joined the Helsinki Camera Club (Kameraseura), which then was the most important institution in Finnish photography. It published Kameralehti, the biggest photography magazine in Finland, and many of the best professional photographers working in Helsinki were its members. When “official” art photography started in Finland at the end of the 1960s, half of the photographers who got scholarships and state prizes and had exhibitions, were HCC members.
For a while (1969-1970) I was an assistant editor of the Kameralehti and was one of the four original photography teachers at the University of Industrial Arts, when it started in 1973. I was teaching mainly the history of photography and portrait photography. My first private exhibition (1973) was about snapshots, the next one (1977) about portraits, and these two braches were main subjects of my exhibitions till 1990s.
In the 1970s I was working mainly for ladies magazines, but in the 1980s gradually turned to advertising photography. The 1990s depression had big impact on advertising, and my company went bankrupt in 1996. In 2002 I finally lost my studio. In spite of financial problems I held smaller exhibitions on various themes in the 1990s and in 2002 two big retrospective exhibitions. The first one covered my themes since the 1960s to the present day. The second one was dedicated to portrait photography. Some of these themes along with new material are presented at ROSPHOTO.
In 1978 in Arles I participated in a Japanese photography workshop, where teachers were Shoji Ueda and Ikko Narahara. There I learned something about traditional Japanese concept of time and space, which fascinated me. I think it shows also in many of my photographs, but I’m not the right person to make such conclusions.
On November 28, 2008 I joined the Blipfoto community and from that day I have taken and sent a photo to the site every day. These Blipfotos serve me as “finger rehearsals” to keep my sensitivity for more important projects. But it has also helped me to seek and find beauty in everyday objects. And in those blips there are many buds to new themes, which will eventually develop into more important projects”.
Еще
Born in 1945. Photographer, photography teacher, non-fiction writer.
1958 first photographs 1966–1969 advertising and press photographer at Laatukuva 1969–1970 assistant editor of Kameralehti, photography magazine 1970–1982 freelance photographer 1970–1995 photography teacher at University of Industrial Arts, Helsinki 1977–1982 picture editor of Näköpiiri, culture magazine 1982–1996 own studio, Atelier Arkadia 1997 freelance photographer 1964 member of Kameraseura camera club 1984–1987 chairman of Nuoren Voiman Liitto culture organization 1988–1990 chairman of Luova Klubi organization for creative advertising people 1978, 1985 State prize for photographic artists 2002–2006 chairman of Kameraseura 2007 Lifetime artist’s pension from State of Finland
1973 Tärähtäneitä valokuvia (Blurred photos), Finnish Museum of Photography, Helsinki, Finland 1977 Suomalaisia (Finns), Amos Anderson Art Museum, Helsinki, Finland 1979 Jussi Aalto, Finlandia, ZPAF gallery, Krakow, Poland 1981 Valokuvan aika (Time of photography), Finnish Museum of Photography, Helsinki, Finland 1984 Jussi Aallon valokuvia valokuvaajista (J.A.’s photos of photographers), Finnish Museum of Photography, Helsinki, Finland 1986 Muotokuvia (portraits), Amos Anderson Art Museum, Helsinki, Finland 1993 Kosketus (Touch), Poem Gallery, Helsinki, Finland 1994 Helsinki, valoa ja varjoa (Helsinki, light and shadow), Cafe Aalto, Helsinki, Finland 1996 Hot Dogs, Cafe Camera, Helsinki, Finland 1996 Valokumia (Photogums), Galerie Camera, Helsinki, Finland 1998 Miehen elämä (Man’s life), Q-theater, Helsinki, Finland 1998 Vietintekijät (Urge makers), Cafe Camera, Helsinki, Finland 1998 Taiteilijamuotokuvia (Portraits of artists), Theater Avoimet Ovet, Helsinki, Finland 1999 Kesäyllätys (Summer surprise), Galerie Emerald, Helsinki, Finland 1999 Tapaus Junttila (Case Junttila), Galerie Emerald, Helsinki, Finland 2001–2002 Pildistamise rõõm (Joy of photography), Museum of Modern Arts, Pärnu, Estonia 2002 40+4, GalleriZEBRA, Karjaa, Finland 2002 Fotonäitus (Photo exhibition), Gallery Shifara, Tallinn, Estonia 2004 Men at Work, Sanoma House, Helsinki, Finland 2005 Rion Pinta (Surface of Rio), Gallery Pirkko-Liisa Topelius, Helsinki, Finland 2005 Tärähtäneitä valokuvia (Blurred photos), Finnish Museum of Photography, Helsinki, Finland 2008 Valokuva on valokuva on valokuva (A photograph is a photograph is a photograph), Gallery Luova.fi, Helsinki, Finland 2009 Portrait retrospective, Kotka Photography center, Finland 2012 Modern classical romantic, Another Function Gallery, Tokyo, Japan 2012 Portrait retrospective, Lapua photography center, Finland
The most famous works created in the 1960s
The project includes two series Dark Zone and We Walk Alone, photographed in 2010-2012
Artworks in the mediums of photo, film, video and sound installation
Contemporary Finnish photography and video art
Eighty years of the artist’s life and oeuvre with the earliest pictures dating from 1914 and the latest from 1994
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